Manuscripts should be sent both electronically (to cmj@mitpress.mit.edu, with the text "[CMJ MS]" included in the subject line) and in hardcopy. Please send the electronic version in Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF), if possible, with the author's identity removed and figures inserted into the text. Send one hardcopy to George Tzanetakis, Assistant Editor, Computer Music Journal, Department of Computer Science, Faculty of Engineering, University Of Victoria, P.O. Box 3055 STNCSC, Victoria, British Columbia, V8W 3P6 Canada; and another to Douglas Keislar, Editor, Computer Music Journal, 2550 Ninth St. #207B, Berkeley, California 94710, USA.

Before submitting a manuscript, please see the Journal's guidelines, manuscript template, style guide, and spelling guide, available at http:// mitpress.mit.edu/cmj. (Click "Submission Guidelines" in the left-hand column.)

Manuscripts are accepted with the understanding that the editors may revise them for greater conciseness, clarity, and conformity with the Journal's style. Manuscripts are anonymously referred, and authors are sent proofs before publication.

Copyright Policy. Manuscripts are received with the understanding that they represent original material, are not being considered for publication elsewhere, and will not be posted to the Internet nor otherwise publicly distributed by anyone other than MIT Press. Authors will be requested to sign a transfer of copyright to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology so that authors and publishers may be protected from misuse of copyrighted material.

Acceptable Formats. Manuscripts must be submitted both on paper and as PDF files (preferred), Miscrosoft Word files, or unformattted ASCII (discouraged). Although PDF is preferred for submissions, separate Word files and art files will be required upon acceptance of the manuscript.

Specifications. Please put your text into the Journal's Word template, then apply the appropriate style to every paragraph, including headings, code examples, references, etc. Use of the template is recommended for submissions, and required upon acceptance. All material should appear to be double-spaced, including references and figure captions. If possible, insert figures into the document where first discussed; otherwise, supply figures separately and use clearly visible figure callouts in the text, e.g., <INSERT FIGURE 3 ABOUT HERE>.Using a program such as Adobe Acrobat, generate a PDF file from the Word template; otherwise send the Word file itself.

Print the manuscript on one side of letter-bond paper with liberal margins, and include page numbers. The submitted material should not exceed 25 pages, including references and figues.

To ensure anonymity during the review process, the author's name, affiliation, and address should appear on a separate cover page only, and must be omitted from the electronic file.

Editing Guidelines. Computer Music Journal articles should be presented in a formal writing style, with one flow of text that reads as an essay. Employ parenthetical expressions sparingly, and write in complete sentences. The Journal uses neither footnotes nor lists of bulleted items.

There are, at most, three levels of headings. Sections are not numbered. Their titles are printed with initial uppercase letters on all important words (not all uppercase).

The running text must contain a mention of each figure: e.g., "Figure 3 demonstrates this dependency."

Fonts are used sparingly. Program code is placed in a fixed-width font. Italicize the first use of a new term or item of jargon; do not use italicization or fonts for emphasis.

References. Cite references in the text by author's last name and year of publication, in parentheses with no comma. Multiple citations from the same author are separated by commas, e.g., (Roads 1981, 1996). Citations from different authors use semicolons, e.g., (Roads 1981; Roads and Pope 1997).

References should be listed (unnumbered) alphabetically—chronologically for a particular author—at the end of the article. List cited references only, not a general bibliography. The Journal uses the Chicago Manual of Style format, with periods separating most items, e.g.,

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Additional Information

ISSN

1531-5169

Print ISSN

0148-9267

Pages

p. 114

Launched on MUSE

2005-03-17

Open Access

No

Project MUSE Mission

Project MUSE promotes the creation and dissemination of essential humanities and social science resources through collaboration with libraries, publishers, and scholars worldwide. Forged from a partnership between a university press and a library, Project MUSE is a trusted part of the academic and scholarly community it serves.